- Thread starter
- #261
Wild_Bill_Kelso
Senior Master Sergeant
- 3,231
- Mar 18, 2022
Bill, there's a difference between "tail shot off" and "tail shot up", c',mon now. If your tail is "shot off", a three-pointer ain't going to give the pic you posted in reply. If your tail is "shot off" you're getting one hell of a prang. The plane in your pic clearly had a controlled landing, but the tail is still clearly on.
In short, this is a form of equivocation.
It's incredible to me how you or anyone else can read what is written in Shores, see that photo, and not understand the painfully obvious correlation.
When a crew chief, or a mechanic writes an entry on a form reporting battle damage in the field, it's not War and Peace. He's not writing a coroners autopsy report about every damaged aircraft. He's not a lawyer writing a legal contract, and he aint writing in meticulous detail for the benefit of people 80 years in the future who want to know precisely what he meant in some forum argument on the internet. He had a very demanding job and a lot of work to do. If he saw damage like in the photo I posted, I think "Tail shot off" is a reasonable approximation, in my opinion.
That said, it doesn't matter what I think, and it's not my job to defend what Christopher Shores wrote in his book, or whatever the soldier of 1942 wrote that Shores or one of his collaborators transcribed. Shores does get into some detail about what his sources are, if you have a bone to pick with it, by all means reach out to him or double check them.
I really don't know (or care) precisely how much damage that plane suffered. All I know is what is written in the source, and that per the criteria I was counting, it was a 'loss' because it crash landed. The extent of the damage or when or if it was repaired is irrelevant to which side was dominating the air.